Ban on Amit Shah lifted, Azam Khan refuses to apologise

Azam Khan, a senior minister in Uttar Pradesh, said he will not apologise for an alleged hate speech that led to him being banned from campaigning by the Election Commission.

“I have not committed a crime,” Mr. Khan said. The 55-year-old is a prominent Muslim face of the state’s ruling Samajwadi Party.

Earlier this month, the Election Commission made rallies and public meetings off-limits for Mr. Khan and Amit Shah, a top aide of the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi who is running his campaign in Uttar Pradesh. Both were accused of making speeches designed to incite tension between Hindus and Muslims in Uttar Pradesh, which elects 80 parliamentarians.

The ban on Mr. Shah was lifted last evening after the Election Commission said the BJP leader had conceded his fault and in writing vowed not to use “abusive or derogatory language.”

The Samajwadi Party suggested that the commission had not treated Mr. Shah and Mr. Khan equally. “When Azam Khan defends his action, how can the ban on his campaign be lifted?” asked an Election Commission source. “We can examine that once he accepts our authority and orders,” said the source.

Muslims account for nearly 20 per cent of the population of UP. In September last year, Hindu-Muslim riots, allegedly fuelled by inflammatory speeches by leaders from a cross-section of parties, left nearly 60 people dead in Muzaffarnagar in the western part of the state. Nearly 60,000 people were displaced.

The BJP, under prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi, is expected to win the maximum seats in the national election -voting, spread across nine phases, ends on May 12; results will be declared on May 16.

Read the latest and breaking news on AfternoonVoice.com. Get live English news about India and the World from Politics, Sports, Bollywood, Business, Cities, Lifestyle, Jobs and Much More. Register with AfternoonVoice.com to get all the latest news updates as they happen.